Late, late drama at the Bay Oval, but the result looked never in doubt once New Zealand had taken charge of this Test match over the first couple of days. Nonetheless, we promised a good fun five days of cricket from this first of the three Boxing Day Test matches, and I think it is safe to assume we have delivered. A very happy new year to all of you who have stayed the distance with us. Stay safe, and observe the revelries keeping in mind social distancing norms and the local laws of wherever you have joined us from. For the moment, this is Debayan Sen, on behalf of scorer Ranjith P and my co-commentator Karthik Krishnaswamy bidding adieu, hoping that you will join us five days' time at the Hagley Oval for the second and final Test match. Goodbye! PS: Test cricket = BEST cricket!
Williamson comes back to speak : "Our focus is on the present. Absolutely, we want to play the World Test Championship final, and we saw it in the final session today, when there was that carrot in mind. But in Tests, you know that it's all about going moment by moment, and that's what you play with. We did make the declaration that if the wicket doesn't deteriorate, it would have given them a chance. They had some positive players at the crease, and some more to come. The WTC means you give yourself a chance to win a game, but also lose it. It gave the viewers that spectacle, with three possible results going into the final session. I think we saw similar characteristics on this wicket when we played against England. We are playing in our country, but on surfaces which are varied. With the wind and the sun, it started to offer a bit more."
Mohammad Rizwan: "Not too disappointed. This is the beauty of Test cricket. As a human being, I believe Almighty Allah gives us rewards for the hard work. New Zealand worked harder than us, and that's why the result was with their team. After the toss, our decision was good, but fielding well is most important when you want to take early wickets. We collapsed in the field and gave away a few too many catches, but Williamson played really well. (On whether they were going for the victory) Yes, the declaration was a good one, but they took early wickets. Again today we wanted to go for the target, but they took early wickets. They have done really well [lately] in Test cricket. I must give special credit to Neil Wagner, for bowling with a fractured toe. We lost this match, but we are still in the series. We played very well in this match, and we need some improvement in our bowling."
Kane Williamson is the man of the match: "They (the bowlers) were outstanding. Kept passing the bat. The conditions were a bit different from what we're used to, but it also brought the spinner into play. Full credit to Pakistan for the way they fought on the last day, and brought the draw into play. We have a number of leaders in the team to bounce a few ideas off and get a different perspective. It's just such a team fighting effort, to get a result this late into the final day. Pakistan were incredibly resillient, but the guys were coming in with the odd ball that kept picking wickets. For us, it's just about adapting to the surface as well as we can. On the green surfaces that we get in New Zealand, you will get the ball moving around a bit. On the first day Pakistan asked a few questions of us, and if things had gone their way, they might have had us in a more difficult position. In the second innings, you saw a bit of agricultural stuff from us because we were looking to score quicker on a difficult surface."
6.37 pm What a Test match! Young Shaheen Shah Afridi and Naseem Shah did all they could, resisting for nearly eight full overs, before that little lapse from Naseem, and he cannot help but get down on his haunches. Good spirits between the two teams as they walk off. Understated as always from Kane Williamson, as he walks off the Bay Oval with his team. So many heroes in this game, right from Day 1 -- Shaheen Afridi with the new ball burst that day, before Kane Williamson, with some help from Ross Taylor and BJ Watling, worked New Zealand into a position of relative strength. Neil Wagner - what can you say about a guy who soldiers on after suffering a fracture on two of his toes on his right foot, the one that feels the impact of landing every time he runs in to bowl. Pakistan can still look back on a lot of positives -- the fight shown by Faheem Ashraf, Fawad Alam, and the inspirational leadership with the bat by Mohammad Rizwan. Presentations to come soon
Naseem Shah c & b Santner 1 (34m 24b 0x4 0x6) SR: 4.16